PIEZOCERAMIC LEAD-FREE MATERIAL

- Ceram Tec GmbH

The invention relates to a piezoelectric lead-free material based on bismuth sodium titanate, to a method for the production thereof, and to the use thereof.

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Description

The present invention relates to a piezoelectric lead-free material based on bismuth sodium titanate, a method for its production, and use thereof.

Piezoelectric ceramics (piezoceramics) have a broad field of application in the areas of sensors (measuring forces, accelerations, and pressures) and actuators (positioning technology and ultrasound generation).

The use of piezoceramics, in particular in automotive technology (knock sensors, yaw rate sensors, parking sensors), requires materials having high piezoelectric activity with thermal and temporal stability (high Curie temperature, low temperature coefficients, and low aging rates) of the functional parameters.

For quite some time, piezoceramic materials have been made of compositions based on solid solutions (mixed crystals) of lead zirconate (PbZrO3) and lead titanate (PbTiO3). Numerous modifications of the base system are possible by substitution and/or addition of metal ions in limited concentrations when the ions in question meet requirements regarding valence, ionic radius, and character of the chemical bond.

Modification of the base composition by doping with ions having a different valence from the original ions results in diversification of the dielectric and electromechanical properties.

As a substitute for lead zirconate titanate ceramics, under certain conditions compounds having a perovskite structure, such as BiFeO3, KNbO3, NaNbO3, and Na0.5Bi0.5TiO3, may be used.

These piezoceramics belong to the ferroelectrics. Lead-free compositions such as (K,Na)NbO3 and (Sr1−xBax)Nb2O5 are also known as ceramic ferroelectrics, but they do not achieve the properties of known PZT-based systems.

On the whole, with the various modifications of the base systems, a large variety of compositions already exist, by means of which in many cases it has been possible to achieve a particular application-oriented specification of the dielectric and electromechanical properties of piezoelectric materials for various converter functions.

One disadvantage of the known lead zirconate titanate ceramics is the lead oxide used as the main component, specifically, Pb2+ which is solidly bound in the perovskite lattice. Therefore, due to the poor environmental compatibility of lead oxide, lead-free piezoceramics should preferably be used in the future. One promising system in the area of lead-free systems is the Bi0.5Na0.5TiO3 system (bismuth sodium titanate (BNT)). However, even this system has some drawbacks:

Due to the solubility of sodium carbonate in water and the resulting homogeneity problems during production of bismuth sodium titanate, ethanol is used as solvent. As a result, requirements for working with explosive materials as well as environmental standards must be met, which entails fairly complicated methods and costly equipment. The benefits gained by the use of lead-free systems are partly offset by these additional constraints.

Furthermore, in the sintering of bismuth sodium titanate there is the problem that oxygen vacancies develop, thus increasing the conductivity of the material and making polarization more difficult.

The object of the present invention, therefore, is to provide a lead-free piezoceramic material in the bismuth sodium titanate system which has minimal oxygen vacancies, and which can be produced in an aqueous system.

The control over the formation of oxygen vacancies in the process thus represents an important feature of the method according to the invention.

The object of the invention is achieved by the features of the main claim. Advantageous embodiments are defined in the subclaims.

Accordingly, a method according to the invention provides for the production of a piezoceramic lead-free material composed of bismuth sodium titanate, sodium bismuthate (NaBiO3) being used as the sodium and bismuth source.

A stoichiometric compound is present in the Bi0.53+Na0.51+Ti4+O32− (BNT) system. Oxygen vacancies may be created by foreign substances, i.e., impurities, or also by the calcination and sintering processes. This is prevented by the use of Na1+Bi5+O32−. In this compound, the oxygen concentration is higher compared to BNT, and is liberated during sintering due to the reduction of Bi5+ to Bi3+.

Thus, the sintering advantageously takes place in an oxygen-rich environment which prevents/minimizes, or in any case significantly reduces, the development of oxygen vacancies.

As a result, the sintering temperature may be lowered by as much as 50° C. A farther distance from the melting temperature, which may be approximately 1250° C., is thus provided. The method is therefore also more energy-efficient as the result of lowering the process temperature.

According to one preferred refinement of the invention, the piezoceramic material is mixed and ground in an aqueous system. This has the advantage that requirements for working with explosive materials do not apply, since ethanol is not used as solvent.

Environmental standards concerning the lead content of PZT ceramics also do not apply due to the fact that the lead content is minimized; the content of lead is particularly preferably below 0.1 mass-%.

A piezoceramic lead-free material according to the invention may be used, for example, in the area of sensors, in particular for measuring forces, accelerations, and pressures, and in the area of actuators, in particular positioning technology and ultrasound generation.

Claims

1. Method for producing a piezoceramic lead-free bismuth sodium titanate material, characterized in that sodium bismuthate (NaBiO3) is used as the sodium and bismuth source.

2-5. (canceled)

Patent History
Publication number: 20140120032
Type: Application
Filed: Jun 29, 2012
Publication Date: May 1, 2014
Patent Grant number: 10008661
Applicant: Ceram Tec GmbH (Plochingen)
Inventors: Friederike Apel (Rueckersdorf), Hans-Juergen Schreiner (Hersbruck), Claudia Voigt (Grossschirma)
Application Number: 14/125,514
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Titanium (e.g., Titanate, Etc.) (423/598)
International Classification: H01L 41/187 (20060101);